Year-Around Monthly Organic Vegetable Garden Checklist

Download this free organic vegetable garden checklist that walks you through an entire year of tasks you can do to grow your own food, making notes of dates, weather & varieties for an easy record keeper, too.

Welcome to Tuesdays In the Garden with a theme of Tips & Tools to Help You Garden Better and Easier! Sounds great, right? I’m updating one of my favorite tools for you, an organic vegetable garden checklist, and you’ll find tips to plant containers, use succession gardening, attract pollinators, keep track of your plants, and more by following the links after my article. Happy gardening!

Did you grow up in a home with a garden? If you did, then you are one of the lucky ones with an idea of what should be done and when. I didn’t, so when I first started dipping my toes into vegetable gardening (after thinking flowers was all I’d ever grow…), I was at the mercy of the garden centers. You know – if they’re selling lettuce seedlings, it must be time to plant them.

There are a few problems with this, though:

You miss early planting opportunities. Stores may not stock lettuce seedlings until a month or more after I could actually be growing them.

Stores are notorious for offering seedlings too early for optimal planting: I’ve seen corn sold in March (waaaay too cold for corn – plus corn is best direct-seeded), tomatoes and peppers in April (still too cold, especially for peppers). Much of the time the seedlings don’t actually die, but they never thrive and produce a lot less than if planted at the best time. So people (me included in the beginning) succumb to spring fever and buy them each year anyway.

I read and read and soon started to figure out that I needed some guidelines if I wanted to grow what I liked and get the most produce from my efforts. After many years of cutting out different monthly “to-do” lists from newspapers, the county extension office, and gardening books, I had some ideas and made some changes. But mostly I had a file that I didn’t use because it was so stuffed.

Which is why I finally compiled them all into a master to-do list that has been so helpful to me that I just had to share it with you as part of the Vegetable Gardening 101 series.

The Organic Vegetable Garden Checklist

This 5-page gardening checklist includes not only basic tasks, but also the things we gardeners always hope we will do if we ever get to them. In other words, this is a dream garden schedule – an optimum planting schedule for zone 8 gardens (where I garden), plus seeding and fertilizing information (though it’s adaptable for your garden zone by changing some of the dates).

It is set up as a year-long schedule in order to be able to plan an early spring and fall garden, as well as the typical summer garden.

The organic vegetable garden checklist includes:

when to start seeds indoors, harden off, and plant

when to plant transplants (TP) and to direct seed (DS)

when to fertilize organically

a general fruit pruning schedule

However, the most important thing you need to know about this checklist is:

In all the years I’ve used this (and they are many), I’ve NEVER done everything on the list!

Like I said, it’s a dream garden schedule, but life doesn’t always work like that, at least at my house and I’m pretty our houses are similar! For example, I don’t think I’ve ever started any plant in January…I’d always like to, but I tend to be planning and dreaming then, totally forgetting that I could actually be DOING something. And I’ve not really taken advantage of my cold frames in order to get some greens earlier than the 1st of May, but it’s a goal of mine, so it remains on the list.

The point is, don’t be intimidated by all that’s included! You’re not meant to do everything on the list, just the things you want to. You may not grow blueberries for example. But if you ever do, you’ll know what to do for them and when.

Note: current email subscribers have access to this in the Subscriber Resource Library – no need to sign up again! For new subscribers, after confirming your email, you will get a welcome email with the link and password to the library to download this checklist and more.

Use as an At-a-Glance Garden Journal

A discovery I made after using this for a few years was that it works as a super easy garden journal! I had always tried to use more involved notebooks, but would peter out after awhile. It’s so easy to add a note about a variety planted, what the temperature was, or when the first harvest was collected right on this to-do list that always hangs in our laundry-mudroom.

Adjust to Your Garden Zone

While this garden to-do list is tailored to a zone 8, Pacific Northwest (west of the Cascades) garden, it can easily serve as an organizing tool for most zones by changing the dates to suit your local planting schedule. Use the checklist as a springboard and change it up based on your local newspaper and extension office’s “gardening to-do” lists that are published frequently.

I’ve heard from many readers who have found that even though they live in the midwest or northeast, there are many tasks that are done at similar times and need just a bit of adjusting. Some have kept the lists, but just changed the months, moving them later or earlier as needed.

I have found that using this organic vegetable garden checklist makes the planning of my vegetable gardening easier, and my hope is that it will help you, too! And please let me know if and how you use it or any suggestions you have about improving it.

Related

About Jami

Jami Boys is an author, blogger, and imperfect do-it-yourselfer who lives in the green, lovely, and often rainy Pacific Northwest with her husband and two children. Her passion is to help others enjoy life & embrace simplicity through whole-food recipes, easy DIY projects, and do-able gardening.

Reader Interactions

Comments

im just 60 miles north of dallas texas,, and my question to u is, how different is our lag time to ur schedule on west coast for i dont know ur usual last frost date,, as we usually get a frost or snow around easter or about 7 days after it usually no later than 20th of april because we have a warming trend about march, so now days our march is mild and i chance it and does not come n like a lamb and leav like a lion thats now aprils theme and may flowers start n april, i start n window seals most years about 80 trans plants ,,onions and potatoes n by march 1st

You are about the same as I am here in Western Oregon, Perry – zone 8a. Our last frost date is also April 22, though I don’t think we’re quite as warm as you. Maybe you could plant tomatoes earlier than we do? The first weekend in May is usually safe for warm-weather plants like tomatoes because of our cold, rainy spring.

I need this for my new and improved veggie garden that is coming soon! The points you make are right on. I go the the garden center, and sometimes I’m shocked to see the things they have in either way too early or too late. Also, the variety is never good. I’d rather grow what I love instead of getting stuck with a plant I’m not thrilled about. I love your lists because I always feel like it’s better to set the bar high and plan instead of totally forgetting! Dream big right?

Great checklist, I too always have a plan but life gets in the way. Thanks for the tips on seeds too, it’s always so much cheaper to grow from seed and I say I am going to do it, but each late winter I fail to get it done.

What a nice offer to give everyone a checklist. They are great for keeping on track even if we don’t follow it to a tee. There’s always a new tip or helpful reminder and these days we all need a little help with our busy lives.

What a great garden planner! Thanks for putting this together Jamie. I definitely can see the help it offers. I’m glad you mentioned it is a dream planner. In my dreams would my garden ever be this organized! I am printing it out and we will use it! Thanks again and Happy Gardening!

Latest Videos

All AOC’s Categories

Copyright Note: While the copyright at the bottom of the page covers everything on An Oregon Cottage, permission is not required to use one image and no more than 2 lines of text IF you clearly provide a DIRECT LINK back to this source wherever the image appears. Please do not copy and publish full recipes. I appreciate all honest shares and features!

Disclaimer: All content provided on An Oregon Cottage is for informational purposes only. The owner of this blog makes no representations as to the accuracy or completeness of any information on this site or found by following any link on this site.